11,000 Nigerians sue Shell in London Courts

Six months after Shell admitted liability following two massive oil spills in the Niger Delta, law firm
Leigh Day & Co are serving formal legal proceedings tomorrow (Friday 23 March 2012) on the oil
giant in the High Court in London for compensation on behalf of over 11,000 Nigerians after
negotiations broke down last week.

This will be the first time Shell or any Oil Company has faced claims in the UK from a community
from the developing world for environmental damage caused by its oil extraction operations.

The legal action concerns environmental damage from oil spills, which experts have advised
amounted to about 500,000 barrels from a Shell pipeline in 2008. The oil devastated the
environment surrounding the community of Bodo [1], in Gokana Local Government Area, Rivers
State, Nigeria.

Leigh Day & Co represents the Bodo Community and is bringing the mutli-million pound claim,
coupled with a demand for clean up of the oil spills, against Shell Petroleum Development
Company (Nigeria) ltd in the High Court, in London.

The Bodo community is a rural coastal settlement which now consists of 49,000 people who live
in 35 villages. The majority of its inhabitants are subsistence fishermen and farmers.

Expert evidence shows the spills to have devastated over 90 square kilometres of the local land,
mangroves and waterways, estimated to be equivalent to the amount of coastline affected by the
BP Deepwater Horizon disaster.

Of particular import has been the devastating effect of the oil on the fish in the area which has
been so bad that the local fishing industry has almost entirely ground to a halt. This in turn has
led to wide spread financial ruin for much of the community.

In August 2011 Shell admitted liability for the two oil spills but not for the amount of oil spilled or
the extent of the damage caused and invited Leigh Day to the negotiating table. Lawyers from
the law firm hoped that despite this disagreement the oil giant, who last year reported global
annual earnings of £18bn, or more than £2m an hour, would agree a compensation package with
the devastated and impoverished fishing community, and would reach agreement in relation to
the clean-up of the community.

Those negotiations failed last week leaving the people of Bodo uncompensated and the
community still devastated by the oil. The lawyers say that legal action is the only avenue left
open to them in order to obtain compensation for the impact the spills have had on the
community’s livelihood. They also hope to ensure that work begins to repair the damage from the
oil spills, more than three years after the spills occurred.

Shell say they were informed of the first leak in early October 2008. The community says by this
date oil had already been pumping into the creek for approximately six weeks. Even then it took
Shell over a month to repair the weld defect in the pipeline.

The second spill occurred in December 2008 and was also the result of equipment failure. It was
not capped until February 2009 during which time even greater damage was inflicted upon the
creek as an estimated 3,900 barrels of crude oil pumped into the rivers and creeks per day over
a period of two months.

The legal action will present evidence from research [2] carried out just before the spills which
states that the main river channels in the Bodo creek had no physical trace of oil, were ‘near
pristine’, were rich in fauna and free of hydrocarbons.

Following the two spills, in September 2009, a Post Impact Ecological Assessment study[3] of

the oil spillages was carried out on the Bodo creek. This found a severe reduction in the
abundance of marine life with shellfish no longer present and fish numbers dramatically reduced.

The United Nations Environment Programme’s Environmental Assessment of Ogoniland 2011
has backed up these findings. It surveyed pipelines and visited all oil spill sites including the
Bodo creek. It found Hydrocarbon contamination in water in some sites to be 1,000 times higher
than permitted under Nigerian drinking water standards.

The lawyer representing the claimants, Martyn Day from Leigh Day & Co, said:

“We are desperately disappointed that the attempts to negotiate a settlement for all those
affected have now failed. We had thought that the invitation to sit around the table meant that
Shell was taking the impact of the two oil spills seriously. We are now left with the only option of
taking the claims through the UK Courts to obtain justice for the people of Bodo.

“One of the most shocking aspects of this case is that by their own admission, instead of shutting
down the leaking pipelines when they learnt of the leaks Shell continued pumping oil for weeks
causing increasing devastation to Bodo’s environment in a flagrant breach of their own policies
and of Nigerian law.

“It is hard to believe that Shell would have acted in this way if a spill had occurred in any of their
other pipelines on other continents. I have little doubt that in the minds of the Shell executives
there is one law for Africa and another law for the rest of the world.”

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Blast from the Past

Garda whistleblower Maurice McCabe’s first contact with a TD came about because he saw Clare Daly TD on ‘Tonight with Vincent Browne’ talking about policing of Corrib Gas protests, writes William Hederman

The repercussions for Garda whistleblowers Maurice McCabe and John Wilson will be familiar to others who have publicly embarrassed An Garda Síochána. They were clearly acting in the public interest, but their revelations brought the force into disrepute, and the two men suffered as a result. Revenge was exacted – not only by colleagues, but also by way of public denunciation by the Garda Commissioner (“disgusting”), the Minister for Justice (“not co-operating”) and by various other parties loyal to the force.